Jayapal said those boycotting the event will hold their own State of Our Union address "to talk about our opposition to these racist policies that are being put out of the White House and to make sure that we put forward our own progressive vision of what our America looks like."

I just announced on #PoliticsNation that I will NOT attend the State of the Union. Instead, I’ll monitor this President from my office. His current comments about black unemployment, which remains unacceptably high, is just another sign that he doesn’t get it.

"His current comments about black unemployment, which remains unacceptably high, is just another sign that he doesn't get it," Meeks tweeted.

Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., will skip the address and send DACA recipient Aldo Solano in his place. Trump ended DACA last year and urged Congress to make the program permanent as a part of larger immigration reform.

Rather than listening to another destructive, divisive speech by Trump, I will not attend this year’s annual address to Congress. Instead, like I did during his inauguration, I'll be working at home listening to Oregonians about what they think about the State of the Union! #SOTU

"Trump's disastrous policies have destroyed lives and impact real people who call our country home. We can't let Aldo down," Blumenauer tweeted Sunday. Nearly two dozen of Blumenauer's colleagues who will attend have said they will bring DACA recipients as their invited guests.

"I refuse to normalize President Donald Trump and his loathsome language and actions. The American people have been subjected to a year of racist, erratic, and divisive behavior from their Commander in Chief, and I refuse to accept that as the new normal," she said in a release.

While not a lawmaker, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg will skip the address in favor of a previously scheduled stop on her speaking tour during the court's monthlong break, according to the Associated Press.